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Dave Arquati wrote:
Aidan Stanger wrote: Dave Arquati wrote: Aidan Stanger wrote: Yet they're eager to spend far more on infrastructure projects like the £40m bus lane on the Thames Gateway Bridge, and the Canary Wharf branch of Crossrail, which would cost far more than subsidies for boats ever would. The cost of running boats is on the high side, but so are the benefits: they can quickly provide plenty of capacity, link communities N and S of the river, and serve remote parts of London which do not have bus services (parts of Thamesmead are more than 500m from buses, and some riverside industrial estates are much further). Can you get from Heathrow to Canary Wharf by boat? Or from most parts of West London, Paddington, the West End etc? It's not really relevant to compare boat subsidies to the cost of Crossrail It is really relevant to compare them to the cost of THE CANARY WHARF BRANCH OF Crossrail, as its function would be very similar: providing capacity to Canary Wharf, and linking communities across the river. The Canary Wharf branch of Crossrail would only save about ten minutes on the journey from Heathrow, or W.London, Paddington etc. to Canary Wharf, compared with Crossrail to Stratford and then a short DLR journey. DLR doesn't have the capacity to deal with large numbers of passengers transferring off Crossrail at Stratford and heading for Canary Wharf. It would if Bow to Stratford were double tracked and platforms were lengthened. The Jubilee line might, but it's a still a very poor second best to a Crossrail branch. Maybe, but Canary Wharf's just got the Jubilee Line, while much of Central London still hasn't got the railways it needs to solve the overcrowding problems. Which do you think should take priority? The Crossrail branch will also provide a new route into central London from the North Kent line, which should aid capacity into London Bridge etc. It won't do much in the way of tph capacity, as the Greenwich Line will still have to be served. As for passenger capacity, if they were serious about that then they'd finish the work needed to introduce 12 car trains. I'm not saying such a branch should never be built, but it should be a lower priority than Crossrail Line 2. Meanwhile, boats can provide the connectivity at a sensible cost. What connectivity can the boats provide? They already provide connectivity from southern part of the City, but the service is expensive to provide and only accessible for destinations close to the river. I think I meant to type "capacity" there - providing capacity would be far cheaper (per passenger) to provide if there were more passengers. As for Connectivity, there is more potential downstream of Canary Wharf, but the Wapping and Rotherhithe areas could also benefit. - or even the Thames Gateway Bridge for that matter (where did you get the £40m figure from?). TfL expect the entire project to cost £400m, and the bus lanes were expected to come to 10% of the cost. Actually they did say "up to 10%" to it could be less, though somehow I doubt it. Anyway, it would be an appalling waste of money, as tolls would ensure that traffic on the bridge would be free flowing anyway. I think the Dartford Crossing provides a lesson here. Unless toll collection is electronic, the buses will need to bypass queues for payment. Tolling is planned to be electronic (probably similar to the Congestion Charge). A lack of public transport lanes will also endanger the acceptability of the whole project - those lanes are meant to be convertible to tram or DLR later on should they be needed. That's rather a poor location for a tram to cross the river, and the plans for the DLR to use it are dead and buried. Boats won't take you from Thamesmead to Romford, or Abbey Wood to Barking. Buses would do that without bus lanes. No use if they get stuck in the toll queues, or in queues at the bridge exits. Considering the roads they flow out onto, that's unlikely. Boats can be useful but the river serves a limited catchment area; interchange is also difficult between river and other modes except at a few choice locations (although I accept that that can be remedied). Many locations upstream of Greenwich, and a few town centers downstream! Downstream means a lengthy passage around the peninsula and through the Thames Barrier, Assuming they're going to Central London. However, if you assume they're going to the E side of the Isle Of Dogs, it would be quite a direct route. just to reach Woolwich, which will be getting a decent link via the DLR to Canary Wharf anyway. Another TfL project that's a wast of money. They should've concentrated on the NLL/Crossrail tunnel instead. Upstream, I don't see how more value can be extracted out of river services than the current commercial ventures without a massive subsidy. Beyond Westminster, the riverside area isn't particularly teeming with demand, as demonstrated by the current limited commercial services to Chelsea Harbour and not really beyond. Yes, potential is greater in E London, at least initially. The problem with the river is that any pier will by its nature only have half the catchment area of an inland rail/Tube station. But development density is high enough for that not to be a problem. There must be a problem somewhere or TfL wouldn't have dismissed the idea of subsidised river services. That assumes that TfL are |
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